Ballypatrick, Clonmel - Book of County Tipperary, 1889

About “The Book of County Tipperary,” 1889

George Henry Bassett produced 7 Irish county directories in the 1880s: Antrim, Armagh, Down, Kilkenny, Louth, Tipperary and Wexford. Each provides useful history of the respective counties as well as lists of office holders, farmers, traders, and other residents of the individual cities, towns and villages.

The directories are naturally an invaluable resource for those tracing family history. The Book of County Tipperary is the first of these to be made available on libraryireland.com, with its own search page. However, there are a few points to bear in mind.

This online version is designed primarily as a genealogical research tool and therefore the numerous advertisements in the original book, many full page, and quite a few illustrated, have been excluded.

The text has been proofed with due care, but with large bodies of text typographical errors are inevitably bound to occur.

Be aware that there were often inconsistencies in spelling surnames in the 19th century and also that many forenames are abbreviated in Bassett’s directories.

With respect to the last point, surnames which today begin with the “Mc” prefix, for example, were often formerly spelt as “M‘,”. For a list of some of the more common forename abbreviations used in the directory, see Forename Abbreviations.

Ballypatrick is a village of a few houses in the barony of Iffa and Offa East, 5 miles, Irish, east by north, from Clonmel. The nearest railway station is at Kilsheelan, 3 miles, Irish. It is in the parish of Kilcash, which gives name to another small village a short distance from Ballypatrick, at the southern slope of Slievenamon. In 1537 an English Commission discovered that the laws governing the County Tipperary consisted of a singular mixture, including the “Statutes of Kilcash.” See page 13. An ancient residence of the Butlers is one of the interesting features.

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